Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2778859 Arthropod Structure & Development 2011 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

We survey morphological features of larval and adult wasps that undergo their entire larval development inside wood and interpret them in view of the lifestyle. The evolution of some of the characters is explored by mapping them on a recently published phylogeny of Hymenoptera. Based on this phylogeny, it is reasonable to assume that wood-living wasps evolved from a xylophagous/mycetophagous stage as displayed by woodwasps to a carnivorous/parasitoid lifestyle, preying on woodboring insect larvae. The latter mode of life is probably ancestral to the Apocrita which comprise the majority of the order; they share this lifestyle with their sister group, the Orussidae. However, most apocritan wasps have radiated into other habitats, the Orussidae and Stephanidae apparently being the only taxa that have retained the ancestral lifestyle of carnivorous wasps. Other apocritan lineages associated with wood (e.g., Aulacidae, Megalyridae, basal Cynipoidea and some Ichneumonoidea and Chalcidoidea) possibly entered this habitat secondarily and independently acquired morphological traits associated with it. The woody habitat was occupied by Hymenoptera during a crucial stage in their evolution where the transition from the phytophagous to carnivorous lifestyle took place. The anatomy of both larva and adults was extensively transformed in the process.

Research highlights► Transfer from herbivorous to carnivorous lifestyle in Hymenoptera took place in wood. ► Woodliving lifestyles have had profound impact on anatomy of both larvae and adults. ► The majority of Hymenoptera currently do not live in wood. ► Many Hymenoptera that do live in wood probably entered this habitat secondarily.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Insect Science
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